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The missionaries said the children were orphaned in the devastating Jan. 12 earthquake, but the AP established that they all had parents who willingly gave their children up in hopes they would get an education and a better life. A judge released eight of the missionaries last week, but leader Laura Silsby, 40, and her assistant, Charisa Coulter, 24, remain jailed as the investigating judge interviews officials at the orphanages the two visited before the quake. Bonnema said all the orphans in the Children of The Promise orphanage "have been in our care since they were infants." She said most are "true orphans or they've been abandoned." UNICEF says Haiti had some 380,000 orphans prior to the quake -- nearly 4 percent of its population
-- and an estimated half were not true orphans. Child trafficking is a major problem. After the quake, the government halted all adoptions by foreigners that had not been approved beforehand
-- and said children only could leave the country with papers signed by Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive. Bonnema said Bellerive had indeed signed the proper papers. "The Haitian police didn't believe that it was the Haitian prime minister's signature," she said.
[Associated
Press;
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